1. json
a 'json' command for massaging and processing JSON on the command line
json
Package: json
Created by: trentm
Last modified: Sat, 04 Mar 2023 17:04:08 GMT
Version: 11.0.0
Downloads: 464,521
Repository: https://github.com/trentm/json

Install

npm install json
yarn add json

json is a fast CLI tool for working with JSON. It is a single-file node.js
script with no external deps (other than
node.js itself). A quick taste:

$ echo '{"foo":"bar"}' | json
{
  "foo": "bar"
}

$ echo '{"foo":"bar"}' | json foo
bar

$ echo '{"fred":{"age":42}}' | json fred.age    # '.' for property access
42

$ echo '{"age":10}' | json -e 'this.age++'
{
  "age": 11
}

# `json -ga` (g == group, a == array) for streaming mode
$ echo '{"latency":32,"req":"POST /widgets"}
{"latency":10,"req":"GET /ping"}
' | json -gac 'this.latency > 10' req
POST /widgets

Features:

  • pretty-printing JSON
  • natural syntax (like JS code) for extracting particular values
  • get details on JSON syntax errors (handy for config files)
  • filter input JSON (see -e and -c options)
  • fast stream processing (see -ga)
  • JSON validation
  • in-place file editing

See https://trentm.com/json for full docs and examples as a man page.

Follow @trentmick
for updates to json.

Installation

  1. Get node.

  2. npm install -g json

    Note: This used to be called 'jsontool' in the npm registry, but as of
    version 8.0.0 it has taken over the 'json' name. See npm Package
    Name
    below.

OR manually:

  1. Get the 'json' script and put it on your PATH somewhere (it is a single file
    with no external dependencies). For example:

     cd ~/bin
     curl -L https://github.com/trentm/json/raw/master/lib/json.js > json
     chmod 755 json
    

You should now have "json" on your PATH:

$ json --version
json 9.0.0

WARNING for Ubuntu/Debian users: There is a current bug in Debian stable
such that "apt-get install nodejs" installed a nodejs binary instead of a
node binary. You'll either need to create a symlink for node, change the
json command's shebang line to "#!/usr/bin/env nodejs" or use
chrislea's PPA as
discussed on issue #56. You can also do "apt-get install nodejs-legacy" to install symlink for node with apt.

Test suite

make test

You can also limit (somewhat) which tests are run with the TEST_ONLY envvar,
e.g.:

cd test && TEST_ONLY=executable nodeunit test.js

I test against node 0.4 (less so now), 0.6, 0.8, and 0.10.

License

MIT (see the fine LICENSE.txt file).

Module Usage

Since v1.3.1 you can use "json" as a node.js module:

var json = require('json');

However, so far the module API isn't that useful and the CLI is the primary
focus.

npm Package Name

Once upon a time, json was a different thing (see zpoley's json-command
here
), and this module was
called jsontool in npm. As of version 8.0.0 of this module, npm install json
means this tool.

If you see documentation referring to jsontool, it is most likely
referring to this module.

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